transitive v. To falsify or change in such a way as to make favorable to oneself: doctored the evidence.

transitive v. To add ingredients so as to improve or conceal the taste, appearance, or quality of: doctor the soup with a dash of sherry. See Synonyms at adulterate.

transitive v. To alter or modify for a specific end: doctored my standard speech for the small-town audience.

transitive v. Baseball To deface or apply a substance to (the ball): was ejected because he doctored the ball with a piece of sandpaper.

intransitive v. Informal To practice medicine.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

n. A person who has attained a doctorate, such as a Ph.D. or Th.D. or one of many other terminal degrees conferred by a college or university.

n. A physician; a member of the medical profession; one who is trained and licensed to heal the sick. The final examination and qualification may award a doctorate in which case the post-nominal letters are DO, DPM, MD, DMD, DDS, DPT, DC, in the US or MBBS in the UK.

n. A veterinarian; a member of the medical profession; one who is trained and licensed to heal the sick.

n. A nickname for a person who has special knowledge or talents to manipulate or arrange transactions.

v. To act as a medical doctor to.

v. To make (someone) into an (academic) doctor.

v. To physically alter (medically or surgically) a living being in order to change growth or behavior.

v. To genetically alter an extant species.

v. To alter or make obscure, as with the intention to deceive, especially a document.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

n. A teacher; one skilled in a profession, or branch of knowledge; a learned man.

n. An academical title, originally meaning a man so well versed in his department as to be qualified to teach it. Hence: One who has taken the highest degree conferred by a university or college, or has received a diploma of the highest degree. Such diplomas may confer an honorary title only.

n. One duly licensed to practice medicine; a member of the medical profession; a physician.

n. Any mechanical contrivance intended to remedy a difficulty or serve some purpose in an exigency

n. The friar skate.

intransitive v. To practice physic.

transitive v. To treat as a physician does; to apply remedies to; to repair.

transitive v. To confer a doctorate upon; to make a doctor.

transitive v. To tamper with and arrange for one's own purposes; to falsify; to adulterate

from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

To treat, as a doctor or physician; treat medicinally; apply medicines for the cure of; administer medicine or medical treatment to: as, to doctor a disease; to doctor a patient.

To repair; mend; patch up.

To confer the degree of doctor upon.

To disguise by mixture or manipulation; especially, to alter for the purpose of deception; give a false appearance to; adulterate; cook up; tamper with: as, to doctor wine or an account.

To practise physic.

To receive medical treatment; take medicine: as, to doctor for ague.

n. A teacher; an instructor; a learned man; one skilled in a learned profession.

n. In a university, one who has passed all the degrees of a faculty, and is thereby empowered to teach the subjects included in the faculty; a person who has received the highest degree in a faculty: as, a doctor in divinity.

n. Specifically A person duly licensed to practise medicine; a physician; one whose occupation is to cure diseases.

n. A minor part of certain pieces of machinery employed in regulating the feed or in removing surplus material; specifically, the roller in a power printing-press which serves as a conductor of ink to the distributing rollers (see crab-roller, drop-roller): as, a color-doctor; a cleaning-doctor; a lint-doctor, etc.

n. An auxiliary steam-engine; a donkey-engine.

n. In wine-making: A liquor used to mix with inferior wine to make it more palatable, or to give it a resemblance to a better wine.

n. A liquor used to darken the color of wine, as boiled must mixed with pale sherry to produce brown sherry. See shcrry, mosto, and must.

n. A translation of a local name in North Africa of the bird Emberiza striolata. See the extract.

n. Same as doctor-fish.

n. plural False or doctored dice.

n. In some American universities, a degree superior to that of master of arts. Abbreviated Ph. D. See above, 2.

n. In angling, a name applied to several artificial flies: as, the blue doctor, the silver doctor, etc.

n. A boiler feed-pump such as has been preferred on the western rivers of the United States.

OZ: The word "doctor" comes from the Latin word for teacher, and like any teacher/pupil relationship, it is a two-way street and I learn much from my patients especially about these topics, so I encourage viewers to talk openly with their physicians about this and actually push their doctors a little bit to open up about integrative therapies including, prayer and meditation.

"If one doctor doctors another doctor, does thedoctor that's doctoring the doctor doctor thedoctor the way the doctor that's being doctoreddoctors, or does s/he doctor the doctor the way thedoctor that's doctoring doctors doctors?"